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My blog cited in JAMA Surgery paper Progress for bloggers

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About a year and a half ago, I blogged that a medical student on Twitter used a blog post of mine as evidence. In January, the Canadian Journal of Anesthesia published an article I wrote under my pseudonym called “Why I blog and tweet.”

Last month, medical blogging took another step toward legitimacy. A JAMA Surgery Viewpoint formally cited my post critiquing the Finnish randomized trial of antibiotics versus surgery for the treatment of acute appendicitis.

Here is the first page with the portion of the piece discussing what I had written in the blog post.

Click on figure to enlarge.

Here is how citation appears in the JAMA Surgery article.


If you havent read my entire post about the randomized trial, click here.

Last year I said this: “Journals may have to adapt and become more like blogs. In the future, medical information may be disseminated by blogs and comments rather than journal articles and letters to the editor.”

We have already seen prominent publications such as the New England Journal of Medicine starting online forums and the BMJ hosting blogs (at least 36 so far) and rapid responses to published papers.

The sea change in the way medical research is disseminated may be happening sooner than I thought.
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Code Black Part II It gets worse

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Last week, I reviewed the premier of the new medical television series "Code Black" and pointed out several flawed or impossible scenarios. I didnt think Id watch another episode.

But I was alerted to a rather shocking error on last weeks installment. I had to see it for myself.

On this typically chaotic day in the emergency department, a young woman was brought in after a car crash which occurred while she was in her way to the ED because of abdominal pain. A CT scan of her abdomen and pelvis was negative, but her serum lactate level was elevated. They then decided to examine her abdomen and noted tenderness. A bedside ultrasound done in the ED revealed a left ovarian torsion (twisting of the blood supply to the ovary which if not rapidly corrected, could cause irreversible damage). The patient had already had her right ovary removed. Further heightening the drama was that her husband died of lymphoma but had banked his sperm, and the patient wanted to have his baby.

She needed immediate surgery, but all of the hospitals operating rooms were busy. As the window of opportunity to correct the problem was closing, an operating room opened up. But alas, there was not a single gynecologist or surgeon available to do the case. According to the back story about Dr. Neil Hudson, hes a fully trained surgeon who decided to work in emergency medicine. One of the new ED residents begged Dr. Hudson to do the case, and he resisted for a while until it was almost too late.

Despite admitting to having no operating room privileges and surely no malpractice insurance coverage for surgery, Dr. Hudson finally acquiesced. Just before beginning the case, he explained to the OR staff what he was going to do.

Then the egregious error occurred. While scrubbed in the OR and wearing a sterile gloves and gown, he calmly reached up to pull his unsterile mask over his nose and mouth. Thats a no-no.

PS: I could find no reference mentioning an elevated lactate associated with ovarian torsion. The organ is likely too small for ischemia to have any effect on the that lab value.

Some other highlights. For a patient with multiple facial lacerations, Dr. Hudson ligated the maxillary artery—quite a feat in an emergency room without an OR light or any retraction. As you can see from the figure below, the maxillary artery is deep to the jawbone. Not shown are branches of the facial nerve which lie above the artery.

Dr. Leanne Rorich, the all-knowing equivalent of Dr. House, stopped a nosebleed by inserting Foley catheters in each nostril, a well-known trick. However she inflated the balloons with the closest liquid she had on hand—coffee, and the patients blood pressure normalized within seconds.

If the convoluted story of the woman with the ovarian torsion wasnt enough, the patient with the nosebleed happened to be a 14-year-old blind boy on Coumadin who fell while rock climbing with his father.

Stay tuned for the next episode featuring a bus that tumbles off a narrow mountain road while carrying non-compliant hemophiliacs.


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Real Estate in a Depression by Marc Charles

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4:29 PM

Hi Gang:

Ive enclosed a question I received from an entrepreneur recently.

I thought you might like my take.


Question: Marc, whats your take on making money with real estate in the current economy?
M.F. Apple Valley MN


Answer Marc Charles:

In 2004, I mentioned more than a dozen times in my newsletter, blog, speeches and conferences real estate would end badly.

Three conference organizers did not want me back....even though I was the most popular speaker at two of the conferences (according to an attendee poll).

The reason the organizers did not want me back is because I kept talking about a "depression" and real estate collapse (in most areas of the US).

Anyway, that was yesterday....what have you done for me today!

Weve all seen the real estate fiasco...and some people have been devastated by it.

But, the real estate boom (ans BUST) was predictable. If you had eyes to see, you would have known the boom was not going to last.

When I saw a cashier from a local convenience store drive into her triple car garage, which was attached to a $400,000 home, I knew the boom was toast. This was in 2005. The boom lasted another three years, and then kaput!

Almost everyone I knew, 90%+, was bullish on real estate from 2004-2008. The reason everyone was bullish is because in most cases they were making money.

But then the market collapsed....and is still collapsing.

Most people never realize, or refuse to realize, theyre involved in hysteria. But all it takes is simple, common, horse sense. You can also seek wise counsel from someone whos already lived through hysteria or "madness of the crowd". In many cases wise counsel will be twice your age.

Ive made money on real estate. But Ive also avoided major losses. I did not lose one thin dime in real estate from 2004-2009. I was also not underwater with mortgages.

Anyway..enough with the long winded response!

Yes....you can make money on real estate in a Depression. The key is buying at super deep discounts, not being over-anxious about doing deals (or fearful), and paying cash whenever possible.

The problem with most foreclosure properties is finding a clear title, and a property with no liens. But thats another topic.

The days of Fix and Flip are over for now! This market may not recover for 10 years...if ever.

But you can still find incredible deals, offer even less, wait for your terms, and rent the property.

Drop me a note if youd to know about specific markets Im considering.

I hope that helps!

Marc Charles
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